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Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Surface Area of Three-Dimensional Figures

Solid Geometry — Wrapping, Not Filling

In this lesson:

  • Compute LSA and TSA for all solid types
  • Master the slant height computation
  • Solve multi-step ACT surface area problems
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

What You Will Learn About Today

After this lesson, you will:

  1. Distinguish lateral from total surface area
  2. Compute SA of prisms and cylinders
  3. Compute SA of pyramids and cones using slant height
  4. Apply the sphere formula
  5. Solve multi-step ACT surface area problems
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Wrapping Paper Not Filling — Surface Versus Volume

  • Volume = how much fits inside (cubic units)
  • Surface area = how much covers the outside (square units)
  • LSA = lateral faces only (sides, no top or bottom)
  • TSA = all faces including base(s)

On the ACT, "surface area" means TSA unless stated otherwise.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

LSA Versus TSA and When Each Applies

  • Prisms and cylinders: 2 bases →
  • Pyramids and cones: 1 base →
  • Spheres: 0 bases → (just one formula)

Count the flat faces to know how many bases to add.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Unwrapping a Cylinder Reveals the Formula

Cylinder being unwrapped — lateral surface becomes a rectangle with width 2πr and height h

The lateral surface is a rectangle: width , height .

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Rectangular Prism Surface Area Step by Step

A box is 8 × 5 × 3 cm. Find TSA.

Step 1:

Step 2:

Step 3:

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Cylinder Surface Area With Radius and Height

A cylinder has cm and cm.

Step 1:

Step 2: Base area:

Step 3:

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Quick Check — Find the Label Area

A cylindrical can has cm and cm. A label wraps the lateral surface. What is the label's area?

Think: do you need LSA or TSA?

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Slant Height Changes Everything for Pyramids

Cross-section of a cone showing right triangle with height h, radius r, and slant height l

  • Height : straight down from apex to base center
  • Slant height : along the surface from apex to base edge
  • Key relationship:
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Square Pyramid With Given Slant Height

Base edge m, slant height m. Find TSA.

Step 1: m

Step 2:

Step 3:

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Square Pyramid Requiring Slant Height Computation

Base edge cm, height cm. Find TSA.

Step 1: Find : apothem ,

Step 2: cm²

Step 3: cm²

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Cone Surface Area With Radius and Height

A cone: cm, cm. Find TSA.

Step 1: cm

Step 2:

Step 3: cm²

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Quick Check — Find Total Surface Area

A cone has and . Find the total surface area.

Remember: cones have one base, not two.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Sphere Surface Area Is Four Pi R Squared

Example: Sphere with :

No LSA/TSA distinction — spheres have no flat faces.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Sphere Example With the Diameter Trap

A basketball has diameter 9.4 in. Find the surface area.

Step 1: in

Step 2: in²

Always convert diameter to radius first!

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Surface Area Versus Volume — The Exponent Tells

Side-by-side comparison of SA and volume formulas for sphere, cone, and cylinder

→ area (square units) | → volume (cubic units)

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

ACT Practice — Identify Shape and Formula

Problem 1: A cylinder has and . Find the TSA.

Problem 2: A square pyramid has base edge 10 and . Find the TSA.

Identify what you need — and check for slant height!

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Multi-Step Cone Problem With Slant Height

A cone: , . Find the total surface area.

Step 1:

Step 2:

Step 3:

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Solutions to the ACT Practice Problems

Problem 1:

Problem 2: Apothem , .

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Key Takeaways and Common Mistake Warnings

  • Prisms/cylinders: , add 2 bases
  • Pyramids/cones: use slant height , add 1 base
  • Sphere: (no bases)

Watch out:

  • Slant height height — find first
  • = area, = volume
  • Count bases: 2, 1, or 0
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Surface Area of 3D Figures | Lesson 2 of 4: Solid Geometry

Coming Up Next in Solid Geometry

Up next: Composite 3D figures

  • Combining and subtracting standard shapes
  • Volume of composite figures
  • The contact-area trap in surface area
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry